1. Field of Invention
The present application generally relates to AC induction motors and more specifically to an AC induction motor having increased torque output by increasing the number of poles and increasing the gap between the stator and rotor.
2. Status of the Prior Art
The theory of motor operation can be developed based on the equivalency of electric-to-magnetic-to-mechanical energy exchange. The theory encompasses both the Lorentz Force Equation and the equation for attractive forces. The Lorentz Force Equation is usually invoked for evaluating AC machine performance while the equation for attractive forces evaluates reluctance motor analysis.
The universal law used to explain the operation of an electromotive machine is simply stated as the equivalence of the change in stored magnetic energy dEmagnetic with the change in mechanical shaft energy dEmechanical:
dEmagnetic=dEmechanical Eq. 1
Magnetic energy exists within a magnetic field because the field requires energy for its formation in the first place. The magnetic field represents the exact amount of energy that was expended for its creation.
The most effective method of storing magnetic energy is with an electromagnetic device known as an inductor. The inductor consists of a coil of n turns surrounding an iron core serving as the magnetic circuit for conducting magnetic flux. The iron core presents low resistance or low reluctance R, to the flow of flux and therefore the core itself contains very little magnetic energy. Consequently, additional reluctance must be added to the magnetic circuit in the form of an air gap in order to increase the energy storage capacitor of the inductor. A relatively small air gap can raise the overall circuit reluctance R by more than ten times. Or in other words, the small gap typically contains over ten times the magnetic energy of the iron core which simply provides the flux conduit for channeling flux through the coil and concentrating flux at the gap.
Additionally, in order to increase the torque of an electric motor, the number of poles can be increased with the penalty of added weight to the motor for a given shape. Furthermore, the addition of poles also decreases the efficiency of the motor. For example, heat dissipation varies as the square of torque. Accordingly, by doubling the torque by adding additional poles, the heat increase will be four-fold.
There is provided an electric motor having a flat form factor. The electric motor has a rotor with a shaft attached thereto. The rotor further includes a plurality of teeth disposed thereon. The motor further includes a stator having an axial length. A plurality of teeth are disposed on the stator such that a gap is defined between the teeth of the stator and the teeth of the rotor. The motor further includes a plurality of copper windings disposed around each of the teeth of stator. Each of the windings has a length of end copper equal to about twice the axial length of the stator. In this regard, the end copper of the coil is greater than the width of the stator. Accordingly, the form of the stator and hence the motor can be flattened.
The windings can be configured for three phases such that there are thirty-six stator teeth to form twelve poles. Furthermore, the gap between the stator and rotor is configured to increase the magnetic reluctance of the circuit thereby increasing the torque. Alternatively, the motor can be operated in partial saturation in order to increase motor torque.
Additionally, there is provided a method of making an electric motor with increased torque. The method comprises providing a rotor having a plurality of rotor teeth and a shaft. A stator is provided that has a plurality of stator teeth. The stator is configured to circumferentially surround the rotor. A gap is defined between the rotor teeth and the stator teeth. A wire coil is wrapped around the stator teeth such that a length of the end copper for the wire coil is about two times greater than the width of the stator.
A method of generating increased torque from an electric motor having a rotor, a stator, at least one stator tooth and a wire coil comprises wrapping the wire coil around the stator tooth such that a length of the end copper for the wire coil exceeds the width of the stator. In this respect, the length of the end copper for the wire coil is about two times greater than the width of the stator.
These, as well as other features of the present invention, will become more apparent upon reference to the drawings wherein:
Referring now to the drawings wherein the showings are for purposes of illustrating preferred embodiments of the present invention only, and not for purposes of limiting the same,
Referring to
In a “smooth bore” format, the poles are typically formed magnetically by the windings. Only in a reluctance type machine are poles created mechanically by protrusions of the iron core which are termed “salient” poles. The particular slot count shown in
The motor of
A shaft rotating through an angle against torque (motor case) will expend energy proportional to the electric energy consumed during the time interval under consideration. Conversion of electric energy to mechanical energy goes through an intermediate step involving magnetic energy. This is the critical link between electrical energy input and mechanical energy output. It is only reasonable to suppose there should be a quantity of magnetic energy ΔEM corresponding to both the electrical energy input and mechanical energy output.
Basic electromagnetic theory shows the magnetic energy of an ideal inductor is entirely stored in a gap intentionally interposed in the magnetic circuit when core permeability is assumed infinite. Where there is no gap there is no stored magnetic energy and the system is not identified as an inductor. For instance, an ideal transformer (no gap, infinite permeability) is not an inductor and requires no magnetizing current. The presence of magnetizing current and magnetic energy in any electromagnetic-mechanical system implies properties of an inductor. Any device which utilizes magnetic energy for conversion of electrical to mechanical energy must be modeled as an inductor with provision for storage of magnetic energy, which in the case of an ideal inductor, is stored only in the gap.
Assume that there is a quantity of magnetic energy ΔEM equivalent to the quantity of mechanical work (shaft energy) ΔES. If the resulting torque equation is identical to the recognized Lorentz expression, which forms the foundation of conventional motor analysis, then this assumption has been proven correct.
Pole coil current i will be held constant in order to eliminate the effect of varying current di which creates only reactive energy. Under this condition, any change in B is solely due to shaft rotation and therefore relates directly and entirely to shaft work.
All expressions are represented on a per-pole basis unless otherwise noted. When total machine parameters and performance are given, they will be identified with the subscript “TOT”.
Referring to
Torque analysis will consider only toque developed in the rotor. The manner in which the stator field exists is irrelevant to the discussion and independent of the results. Therefore, denoting rotor properties with the subscript R will be omitted as understood in except to identify rotor and stator fields.
Assume the total change in the magnetic energy stored in the pole gap of a single pole is equivalent to the change in mechanical energy (shaft work) produced by a single rotor (or stator) pole, so that:
dEMp=dESp Eq. 2
Note: subscripts p and g will designate “per pole” and “gap” location.
The instantaneous magnetic energy of a single rotor pole is:
EMp=½ip2Lp Eq. 3
Differentiating Eq. 3 with the current held constant:
dEMp=½ip2dLp (rotor pole energy) Eq. 4
Expressing pole inductance Lp in terms of its fundamental definition:
Differentiating Eq. 5 at constant current i:
Inserting Eq. 5 into Eq. 4:
From Eq. 2, let differential shaft work be defined as:
dEMp=dESp=Tpdθs Eq. 8
Substituting Eq. 8 into Eq. 7:
Let rotor flux φp be defined as:
φp=ApgBRg Eq. 10
Differentiating Eq. 10:
dφp=ApgdBRg Eq. 11
Substituting Eq. 11 into Eq. 9:
Cursory examination of these torque equations (equations. 9 and 12) can lead to the mistaken conclusion that overall machine torque is independent of the number of poles employed in a motor. Because Apg decreases with increasing pole number, it appears that there is no net gain obtained by the addition of poles.
However, it will be shown that (dBRg/dθS) varies with pole number at a rate that is inversely proportional to pole gap area Apg. These two effects cancel one another so that the number of poles has no effect on the torque per pole as given by Eq. 12. Torque per pole is independent of the total number of poles enabling entire machine torque to rise with the addition of poles, which will be demonstrated next:
Let the pole gap area be given as:
Let BRg, the rotor flux density in the gap, be given as:
BRg=[B′Rg+B′Sg cos θE] (instantaneous rotor flux density) Eq. 14
Prime marks (′) indicate the fixed value of B′Rg and B′Sg as generated by the rotor and stator constant currents. The additional term B′Sg cos θE is the vector component of the stator field penetrating the rotor coil.
Angle θE is the electrical angle, rather than the mechanical angle, according to which BRg varies in sinusoidal synchronization with the mechanical shaft coil angle θS. It is the electrical angle θE that corresponds to variation of BRg, as a function of shaft rotation because, regardless of how many poles may be incorporated, a complete torque cycle always fits within half an electrical cycle. A “torque cycle” is defined as the sinusoidal variation of torque beginning at zero, rising to a peak and returning to zero in a sinusoidal fashion. In a 2-pole machine, these two angles θE and θS are of equal value. Their relationship may be shown as:
Inserting Eq. 15 into Eq. 14:
Differentiating Eq. 16 and using Eq. 15:
Substituting Eq. 17 into Eq. 12:
Substituting Eq. 13 into Eq. 18:
Because the total flux in the pole gap is equal to the total flux inside the pole coil, then let:
πrB′sg=2rB′sc Eq. 20
Solving Eq. 20 for B′Sg:
Substituting Eq. 21 into Eq. 19:
Rearranging terms in Eq. 22 with an electrical torque angle θE so that (sin θE=1):
Tp=r[(ni)phB′Sc] Eq. 23
Note that Eq. 23 is the familiar Lorentz equation applied to one pole or conductor. It is universally applicable to every type of machine producing force or torque electromagnetically.
Even more fundamental is the derivation of the Lorentz force from Eq. 23 by using the definition of torque as Tp=rFp. Then from Eq. 23:
Fp=(ni)phB′Sc (Lorentz force equation) Eq. 24
Note: Eq. 24 is the Lorentz equation for normal force Fp developed on conductor of length h carrying total current (ni)p immersed in a stator magnetic field of flux density BSc.
A real machine cannot have less than two poles. Therefore the actual torque of a 2-pole machine is twice that of Eq. 23 since the total conductor loop length=2h.
The initial assumption has now been verified that the change in magnetic energy dEMp is exactly equal to the change in mechanical energy dESp as expressed in Eq. 2. The direct correspondence of Eq. 2 with Eq. 24 confirms the equality of magnetic and mechanical energy.
The possibility that magnetic energy dEMp may be simply reactive and out-of-phase with shaft energy dESp is prohibited by Eq. 2 which indicates both energies manifest simultaneously and in-phase.
Also, the stipulation of constant current is given to eliminate reactive energy which can be shown as appearing only in conjunction with time-varying current. Where varying current exists, reactive energy will unavoidably appear in actual machines that are fundamentally AC in nature and posses magnetic energy storage properties.
In short, the machine show in
Generally, from Eq. 18:
Confusion has understandably arisen over the role of poles for reasons discussed following Eq. 12, inasmuch as the general equation for torque per pole is often presented without clear definition as:
which corresponds to Eq. 9. It's easy to reach a false conclusion at first glance because “obviously” the flux per pole φP decreases as more poles are added so therefore nothing is gained by adding more poles. In fact the flux per pole does decrease with increasing poles but this is exactly offset by a proportional increase in the rate of change of flux due to the distinction between electrical (magnetic field) angle θE and shaft angle θS as given by Eq. 15. For instance, a 4-pole motor has twice the electrical angle relative to shaft angle as a 2-pole motor.
In terms of absolute pole magnetic energy, higher poles do indeed encompass less flux and therefore less magnetic energy than do fewer poles. The shaft angle required to traverse a pole decreases with higher pole numbers and thus less gap magnetic energy is available for conversion to mechanical energy, according to Heisenberg's Equi-Partition of Energy.
However, less energy does not translate to less torque. The initial assumption of Eq. 2 applies only to the equivalence of magnetic and mechanical energy where mechanical energy is torque multiplied by the shaft angle, not electrical angle.
This can be shown by multiplying both sides of Eq. 19 or Eq. 22 by dθS to give:
With increasing poles, the shaft angle decreases in traversing a torque cycle so that dEMp decreases per torque cycle. Substituting Eq. 15 into Eq. 27 clarifies this point:
Clearly, while traversing one torque cycle (half an electrical cycle, θE), the magnetic energy per pole dEMp decreases as pole number Np increases. But, while the pole energy dEMp decreases, pole torque Tp remains constant irrespective of pole number. In other words, even though the change in shaft angle dθS per torque cycle decreases as pole number increases, the resulting decrease in dEMp is due solely to the decrease in shaft angle dθS, not a decrease in pole torque Tp. Thus pole torque Tp is constant independent of the number of poles Np.
It has been shown that the number of poles Np directly determines the potential for torque development. However, adding poles in order to increase torque, for a given motor shape, severely increases resistive losses and results in reduced efficiency. Only by changing motor shape can this pole efficiency penalty be circumvented.
As mentioned above, the other fundamental element in torque production is the quantity of magnetic energy stored in the machine. Most of the stored magnetic energy resides in the rotor-stator air gap. This energy Emag is therefore proportional to gap volume νvol and the square of gap flux density Bgap2. Thus both flux density Bgap and gap volume νgap must be held constant when poles are added to achieve the maximum gain in torque with increasing poles.
Stored magnetic energy may be expressed as:
Emag=kνgapBgap2 Eq. 29
Gap volume νgap for a given machine size is proportional to the radial gap length lgap so that Eq. 29 may be written as:
Emag=klgapBgap2 Eq. 30
According to Eq. 30, both flux density Bgap and gap length lgap must be held constant as pole number increases in order to achieve the full benefit of torque enhancement due to pole increase alone.
Pole coil amp-turns Ni is directly related to Bgap and lgap as shown by Eq. 31:
Ni=kBgaplgap Eq. 31
Notice that pole cross-sectional area is entirely absent from Eq. 31. The total axial area available for containing both the coil copper and tooth iron of a single pole decreases as the number of poles rises for a given weight and shape machine. Yet, according to Eq. 31, amp-turns Ni must be held constant to maintain flux density Bgap. Current density J=Ni/Acopper must also be held constant to avoid increasing heat generation per pole which means the portion of pole area Acopper occupied by copper must remain constant. Consequently the remaining portion of available pole space occupied tooth iron Atooth width must decrease with increasing poles. As tooth iron Atooth width decreases, gap flux density Bgap decreases as well, because:
But it was stipulated that Bgap be held fixed so that stored magnetic energy does not drop as poles increase and thereby cancel the torque-enhancing effects higher pole numbers.
A pole number is reached where, with constant copper area, tooth iron width Atooth width becomes zero, Bgap=0, machine torque drops to zero and efficiency drops to zero inasmuch as heat dissipation remains the same.
The other alternative is to keep the ratio (Atooth with/Atooth face) constant as pole number increases in order to maintain constant flux density Bgap as shown in Eq. 32. This is equivalent to holding a constant copper/iron ratio. Under this scenario, the copper area is forced to decrease which in turn increases heat generation due to higher coil resistance with an attendant drop in efficiency.
Conflicting demands of copper and iron upon available pole area unavoidably limit the number of poles that can be practically added to a conventional machine without compromising acceptable efficiency. For a given machine shape, at constant gap flux density Bgap, it can be shown that heat dissipation increases as the square of the pole number.
The following analysis is simplified by modeling on the basis of a single phase per stator. However, it can be shown that the same final result is obtained when all three phases share the same stator as in conventional practice.
Motor efficiency is defined as:
According to Eq. 33, motor efficiency rises as the ratio PS/PR increases. Shaft power PS varies as a function of angular shaft frequency ωS:
PS=(Torque)(angular shaft frequency)=Tωs Eq. 34
Therefore efficiency is a function of shaft rotational speed (angular shaft frequency) ωS which obscures the fundamental effect of heat-to-torque ratio upon efficiency which is constant and independent of speed.
Eliminating the shaft frequency variable ωS from PS/PR gives the essential “figure of merit” for machine efficiency as:
From fundamental motor theory (motor shaft power is expressed as:
Let:
Substituting Eq. 37 into Eq. 36
Assume the magnetic energy contained in the iron core is negligible compared to the rotor-stator gap. Then from basic inductor theory, the magnetic energy EMAG stored in the motor gap is expressed as:
Substituting Eq. 39 into Eq. 36 gives:
Let total gap volume νg be defined as:
νg=2πrglgh Eq. 41
Substituting Eq. 41 into Eq. 40:
Note: Eq. 42 represents average torque produced by one phase only. Three phases operating in concert, sharing the same iron core, will produce three times the torque of Eq. 42 so that:
Next, resistive power dissipation PR per pole per phase will be calculated. Let:
PR=i2Rp=electrical power loss of one pole, one phase Eq. 44
In terms of overall coil cross-sectional coil area, resistance R can be expressed as:
Substituting Eq. 45 into Eq. 44:
Amp-turns (ni) is the magneto-motive force, (mmf,) that drives flux across the rotor-stator air gap, where:
Squaring Eq. 47 and inserting into Eq. 46:
The total resistive loss for all poles NP and all three phases 3φ is given as:
Equations 43 and 49 give the total torque and resistive losses of a 3-phase machine of NP poles. Combining these two equations into Equation 35 yields:
Let pole coil slot cross-sectional area Aw be defined as:
Aw=zc Eq. 52
Let slot depth be proportional to gap radius, so that:
z=kzrg Eq. 53
Let average slot width (circumferential) c be defined as:
where,
w=S/3=total copper-iron circumferential width for 3-phase machine only Eq. 55
kc=c/w=proportionality constant indicative of copper-iron ratio Eq. 56
Combining Eqs. 53 and 54 into Eq. 52:
Substituting Eq. 57 into Eq. 50:
where:
K=kgkƒkckz Eq. 59
Eq. 58 shows there is an optimum value of S and h that gives a maximum value of (T/PR)3φ. This is found by determining the minimum value of
setting its derivative equal to zero and solving for the variable. First let:
Combining Eqs. 60 and 61 into
Eq. 62 shows there is an optimum value of gap radius rg for a given pole-number NP and motor volume VOL. But the variable rg also appears in the numerator of Eq. 58 and must be included in the optimization process. So substituting Eq. 62 into Eq. 58:
According to Eq. 63 there is an optimum value of gap radius rg for a machine of constant poles Np and constant volume (weight) VOL that gives a minimum value of
which is found by setting its derivative equal to zero:
Solving Eq. 63 for rg OPT3:
From Eqs. 60 and 61:
VOL=hπrg2 Eq. 68
Substituting Eqs. 67 and 68 into Eq. 66:
Thus, according to Eq. 69, the optimum end-copper arc length SOPT has a fixed proportional relationship to axial length h. Notice that end-copper length SOPT is equal to twice the slot length h. Thus, even though end-copper comprises ⅔ the total conductor length, this particular rectangular pole face geometry nevertheless allows minimum resistance per unit of flux. Therefore SOPT=2h is the basic criteria that must be observed to achieve maximum efficiency regardless of overall motor shape, i.e., maximum efficiency independent of form-factor or “aspect ratio”.
Stated differently, any motor shape is possible so long as the design criteria stipulated by Eq. 69 is observed. End copper length SOPT is indicative of the number of poles required under optimized conditions. Motor shape, in fact, determines the number of poles when optimizing the design according to Eq. 69 because the number of poles determines end-copper length SOPT. In other words, even though the ratio SOPT=2h must hold for any shape, the number of poles required to satisfy SOPT=2h varies according to shape. Shape, then, determines the necessary pole number that produces the relationship SOPT=2h.
The paramount conclusion derived from Eqs. 65 and 69 is that an optimized machine tends toward a flat form-factor, or “pancake” shape, as the number of poles increases. This is further emphasized by substituting Eq. 68 into Eq. 66:
Clearly, from Eq. 71, the aspect ratio (rg/h) is the governed by pole number NP.
Eq. 71 can also be rewritten as:
Returning now to evaluating peak efficiency, which occurs when:
Substituting Eq. 69 into Eq. 73:
It is now possible to finish the optimization process by rewriting Eq. 58 as:
Substituting Eqs. 69 and 75 into Eq. 76 and dropping most of the “OPT” subscripts:
Substituting Eq. 73 into Eq. 77:
Solving Eq. 67 for rg2:
Substituting Eq. 79 into Eq. 78:
For a machine of fixed volume VOL, efficiency must unavoidably drop as the number of poles NP increases. Eq. 80 shows that the only way to maintain efficiency with increasing pole-number is to simultaneously increase volume in the proportion of VOL≡NP1/2. As an example, if the number of poles increases by a factor of 9 times, then volume VOL must increase √{square root over (9)}=3 times.
According to Eq. 80, at fixed machine volume VOL, the efficiency factor (T/PR)3φOPT drops relatively slowly with increasing poles. For instance, if the number of poles NP and resulting torque T increases by 8 times, then (T/PR)3φOPT decreases by only a factor of 81/3=2.
By comparison with gap enlargement techniques for torque gain, this reduction of (T/PR)3φOPT is 4 times less than resulting from an increased gap at constant pole-number where (T/PR)3φOPT would decrease by a factor of 8 times.
Thus torque enhancement by means of pole-number increase is significantly more efficient than achieving similar enhancement by means of gap lg enlargement alone at constant machine volume VOL.
Reviewing Eq. 77 will confirm the conclusion reached from Eq. 80:
It is evident from Eq. 81 that the only way efficiency can remain constant independent of changing machine shape or size is to hold the product rgh constant. Yet, for example, a doubling of radius rg while halving length h in order to hold rgh constant will result in a 2-fold increase of machine volume VOL because:
VOL=hπrg2=πrg(rgh)=rg(const.) Eq. 82
Another way to evaluate this situation is to replace
in the term rgh:
Which shows that at constant volume VOL, the product rgh drops as radius rg increases.
Alternatively, poles NP and resulting torque can be increased at constant rg by decreasing axial length h according to Eq. 70, but this also results in a decrease of the product rgh and a resulting drop in (T/PR)3φOPT with a corresponding reduction in machine efficiency as torque increases.
The most comprehensive expression of (T/PR)3φOPT is found by substituting
Eq. 83 into Eq. 82:
The inescapable conclusion of Eqs. 80 and 84 is that, for constant machine volume VOL, it is impossible to increase torque without some slight compromise of efficiency. However, the loss of efficiency accompanying torque increase is much less when employing multiple poles as compared to the alternative of gap enlargement.
As previously discussed, gap enlargement also increases the torque available. Machine torque, is a function of gap volume Vg, flux density Bg, and the angular rate of change of flux density dBg/dθS. Machine torque T can be derived as simply:
The number of poles NP in Eq. 85 determines the number of flux reversals, or torque cycles, per shaft rotation. Each flux reversal supplies a quantity of magnetic energy ΔEM that is converted into an equivalent quantity of mechanical shaft energy ΔES. Obviously, an increase in the number of poles will result in an increase in the time rate-of-change of magnetic energy converted to mechanical energy per shaft rotation. Thus:
According to Eq. 85, at the most fundamental level, torque production is a function of just two variables: gap magnetic energy ΔEM and the number of poles NP.
As previously discussed above, no motor can have fewer than two poles. Therefore a minimum pole number NP is inherent to any fashion of motor construction. While pole number NP determines the frequency of magnetic energy conversion at a given shaft speed, it is the magnetic energy ΔEM itself, stored within the gap volume Vg, that is an important criterion for torque production. Gap volume Vg is the chief physical means of storing magnetic energy ΔEM and thereby facilitating production of mechanical energy ΔES.
The perfect motor would have a core material possessing infinite permeability (μcore→∞) and zero core reluctance (R→0). In this ideal scenario the total motor reluctance R would exist solely in the gap. Consequently, if there were no gap, magnetic circuit reluctance R would be zero and the presumably “ideal” machine would produce zero torque.
Fortunately, the necessity for mechanical running clearance between rotor and stator has inadvertently provided adequate reluctance R and the requisite magnetic energy storage capacity. Manufacturing tolerances for rotor-stator running clearance has permitted acceptable performance despite the prevailing wisdom of reducing the gap and corresponding reluctance R.
A smaller gap does, however, have the advantage of improving motor efficiency. There is a tradeoff between efficiency and torque; one comes at the expense of the other, as will be discussed later.
Dependency of torque T upon variable motor inductance dL is calculated by:
Accurate modeling of any type of electromotive machine must inevitably be that of a “variable inductor” where variable inductance dL arises strictly from rotor rotation. Based on the two basic definitions of inductance (variable inductance dL takes the form:
Eq. 88 relates to standard smooth-bore AC motors where reluctance R is constant and flux variation dφ arises from rotor rotation even at constant current i. Eq. 89 pertains to reluctance motors where the necessary flux variation dφ arises from variable reluctance dR, also an effect of rotor rotation.
Equations 87, 88 and 89 confirm that every type of motor is essentially a “rotary inductor”, a concept contrary to conventional motor modeling.
Typical textbook modeling of the commonplace AC induction motor is that of a transformer, a convenient explanation of rotor excitation due to slip. However, the transformer model fails to recognize the underlying principle of motor theory as requiring magnetic energy storage, a property which only an inductor can provide. A transformer, on the other hand, stores very little magnetic energy. In the extreme, an ideal transformer of infinite core permeability (μcore→∞) holds zero magnetic energy and therefore could never function as a torque-producing machine. An AC induction motor, while sometimes described as a “rotary transformer” to assist analyzing rotor excitation, must properly be modeled as a “rotary inductor” to correctly portray the theoretical basis of its operation.
Substituting Eqs. 88 and 89 into Eq. 87:
Notice that reluctance R plays an integral role in torque production for both types of machines which together covers the total spectrum of known electromotive machines including the brush-type DC motor.
Ironically, the “brush-type DC motor” would fall under the category of Eq. 90 rather than Eq. 91 because reluctance R is constant inside the region of torque production notwithstanding its obvious salient poles.
The so-called “brushless DC motor” is actually an inverter-controlled, permanent magnet rotor, AC synchronous motor which classifies it under Eq. 90 as well. The permeability of permanent magnet material is so low as to create a large effective rotor-stator gap from a magnetic standpoint, even if the physical gap is quite small. In fact, permanent magnets themselves represent storage of an enormous amount of magnetic energy introduced during their manufacture. Change of flux dφ as seen by the stator with respect to rotor shaft angle, dφ/dθS, dictated by Eq. 90, in a brushless DC motor is due to rotor rotation because the magnitude of permanent magnet flux φ remains nearly constant during operation.
As discussed above, the foundation of torque production is the conversion of a quantity of magnetic energy dEM into an equivalent quantity of mechanical energy dES. The changing magnitude of magnetic energy dEM is due to a changing level of flux dφ because magnetic energy is contained within the flux. Thus magnetic energy can change only with a corresponding change in flux. And the change in flux dφ must be mechanically dependent, not current i dependent, in order for mechanical energy to be extracted:
The term dφ/dθS in Eq. 92 represents the critical “mechanically-dependent change in flux dφ” that is required to convert magnetic energy into mechanical energy.
As shown by Eq 92, the absolute minimum constituents for torque production in any type of motor, smooth bore or salient pole, is reluctance R, magnetic flux φ, and a mechanical means for varying the flux to give dφ/dθS. These vital elements together constitute a change in magnetic energy that inexorably accompanies a change in mechanical energy. Even in a reluctance motor, the net effect of mechanically-variable machine reluctance is to create variable flux dφ as required by Eq. 92.
Magnetic energy ΔEM associated with mechanical energy ΔES, is known as “co-energy” because it is co-created during production of shaft energy by the intermediate magnetic field which links electrical input power to mechanical output power. Co-energy functions as the conversion agency, always co-existing with mechanical energy. Co-energy and mechanical energy are both of equal energy content.
Co-energy is an inescapable by-product of the electro-mechanical conversion process and must be removed from the armature coil during or after each torque cycle (half of an electrical cycle). This is easily accomplished in poly-phase machines with two or more phases because co-energy is simply transferred successively from phase coil to phase coil. Consequently, co-energy never leaves the motor but always remains in the gap while shifting from phase to phase. A true single-phase machine is difficult to implement practically due to the complexity of extracting co-energy at the end of each torque cycle. So-called single-phase machines, in fact, assimilate poly-phase concepts (counter-rotating fields) in their operation.
Reactive energy is created only by variable current di acting upon fixed inductance L which creates a self-induced voltage 90° out-of-phase with current i. Thus reactive energy is not directly related to real energy, i.e., it has no effect upon torque production. Varying current di produces a self-induced, or “inductive” voltage, Vself induced=L(di/dt)
Inductive voltage is not to be confused with machine-generated voltage Vback emf=i(dL/dt) which is termed “back emf” (electromotive force). Back emf arises from variable inductance dL as the result of rotor rotation even at constant current i. This voltage is always exactly in-phase with current i and therefore accounts for real power production of the machine. Real energy developed by back emf is expressed as mechanical energy output and as co-energy transferred from phase to phase.
Unlike real co-energy, reactive energy automatically enters and leaves the motor “inductor” without special provisions. Also unlike co-energy, the magnitude of reactive energy bears no particular relationship to mechanical energy. Reactive energy is equal to co-energy, and therefore mechanical energy, only when both rotor and stator fields are of equal flux density, an ideal operating condition for realizing maximum efficiency.
Increasing the rotor-stator air gap, while creating a favorable condition for torque production, comes with an efficiency penalty due to higher electrical losses in driving flux through a greater reluctance R. In other words, while reluctance R is essential for torque production, reluctance also incurs energy dissipation that ultimately restricts practical torque production. A tradeoff is reached balancing the advantage of high torque against the drawback of reduced efficiency.
Large values of reluctance R for high torque production, as indicated by Eq. 92, may be satisfied in ways other than an enlarged rotor-stator air gap. Reluctance R may be increased by simply operating the motor in a state of partial “core saturation”, a condition where iron permeability μcore of the core begins to drop off substantially.
Magnetic saturation refers to the limited capacity of ferromagnetic material to hold magnetic flux. In the analogy of a sponge absorbing a finite quantity of water, iron is also restricted as to how much flux it can contain. A point of flux concentration is reached where no further increase in total coil current (ni) can raise core flux density Bcore above the saturation limit. This operational threshold is known as “core saturation”. Motors are traditionally intended to operate up to this saturation limit but not above it.
The curve as depicted in
Reluctance, R pertains only to reluctance created by the gap where core reluctance Rcore is considered negligible by comparison in order to simplify the mathematical treatment. However, with the approach of core saturation, total circuit reluctance RT rises with decreasing core permeability μcore having the net effect of magnetically increasing the gap.
Total circuit reluctance RT is simply the sum of iron core reluctance Rcore and gap reluctance R:
According to Eq. 94, as the value of core permeability μcore falls to lower values near saturation, the term 1/μcore increases to become a significant portion of overall circuit reluctance RT. Under conditions approaching saturation, Eq. 92 may be rewritten as:
Maximum motor torque T becomes variable near saturation in as much as it is a function of variable reluctance total circuit reluctance RT. RT, in turn, is a function of variable core permeability μcore (Eqs. 93 and 94) wherein μcore varies as a function of current i, as indicated by the permeability curve of
A motor with a standard rotor-stator air gap achieves the energy storage properties attributable to an enlarged air gap by merely operating at partial saturation during occasions when high torque is demanded. Driving the motor into partial saturation, beyond that allowed by conventional practice, offers a simple and controllable method for raising circuit reluctance RT and thus energy storage capacity of the motor, albeit incurring a slightly reduced efficiency as discussed above. Under partial-load, a small standard air gap allows higher operating efficiencies. Under high torque load, driving the motor into partial saturation extends the range of torque production by a factor of 2 to 3 times the standard rating.
Additional modifications and improvements of the present invention may also be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art. Thus, the particular combination of parts described and illustrated herein is intended to represent only certain embodiments of the present invention, and is not intended to serve as limitations of alternative devices within the spirit and scope of the invention.